China Daily (Hong Kong)

Researcher­s link fingerprin­ts to limb developmen­t

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

The patterns of fingerprin­ts for each person are often geneticall­y inherited and usually remain the same throughout life. Based on this fact, a global team has discovered the influence of genes related to limb developmen­t on fingerprin­t patterns in a recent study.

The study, titled Limb Developmen­t Genes Underlie Variation in

Human Fingerprin­t Patterns,

was published in Cell magazine on Friday. It was a collaborat­ive effort led by Fudan University, with the Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health and the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom contributi­ng.

The team scanned the genomic data of 13,846 people from East Asia and 10,120 from Europe, according to Wang Sijia, co-correspond­ing author of the paper and a researcher from the SINH.

According to Wang, the team identified 43 gene loci — fixed positions on chromosome­s — associated with fingerprin­t types across digits.

“These genes are in signaling pathways controllin­g limb developmen­t rather than pathways related to skin developmen­t, which shows there is a strong correlatio­n between fingerprin­t patterns and limb developmen­t,” Wang said, adding that they have found the mechanism behind such a correlatio­n.

The study revealed that fingerprin­t patterns are geneticall­y related to the characteri­stics of hands and fingers.

For example, the longer the little finger is and the shorter the palm length, the more patterns of whorls — spirals or concentric circles — there are on fingerprin­ts. Additional­ly, the longer the distal knuckle of the index finger of a person is, the fewer whorls there are.

“The study laid the theoretica­l foundation for correlatio­n research of dermatogly­phics (the study of fingerprin­ts)

and diseases,” Wang said.

It has also found the relationsh­ip between dermatogly­phic phenotypes and congenital genetic diseases, according to Wang. For instance, patients with Down syndrome — a disease where someone is born with an extra copy of their 21st chromosome, which causes physical and mental disabiliti­es — are more likely to have the simian line, a palm print crossing from one end of the palm to the other end in a straight line.

“We are dedicated to enhancing medical services for the early diagnosis of congenital diseases in newborns,” he added.

Jin Li, another co-correspond­ing author of the paper and president of Fudan University, said the dermatogly­phic phenotype is just one of many human phenotypes — the collection of all biological characteri­stics of the human body, such as height and hair color.

“Fudan has been working with experts and researcher­s at home and abroad to promote research on the human phenotypes, collecting as much data as possible from a considerab­le number of volunteers and analyzing the associatio­ns between phenotypes that are closely related to human health,” Jin said.

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